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, Posted On: 8/11/2009

Pave to Save?


VCU's bulldozers in Shockoe Bottom may actually protect slave burial ground.
by Chris Dovi
The pavers went to work on VCU’s Shockoe Bottom parking lot early last week, reigniting a protest over the slave burial ground buried underneath.  Photo by Christine Lockerby
 

Virginia Commonwealth University’s decision to repave its parking lot astride the Burial Ground for Negroes sparked protests last week, but some experts and city officials say a few tons of asphalt could be just what’s needed to keep the site safe.

“It keeps the ghoulish out,” says Lyle Browning, an archeologist with Midlothian-based Browning & Associates. “There are people, knowing there are people in the ground with artifacts, that will go down and dig. Finding some way to prevent people from doing that is a good thing.”

The Shockoe Bottom parking lot may have caused a stir, but some people say the unintended consequence isn’t a bad one — that the history is locked in — even if it makes for ugly PR. Still, Browning says, capping a cemetery with an asphalt parking lot “simply isn’t a respectful way to treat human remains.”

The burial ground is located on the north side of Broad Street where the CSX rail lines cross to enter Main Street Station. The area first sparked controversy last year when VCU set plans in motion to repave the property while city-hired archeologists were finding rich artifacts at the nearby Lumpkin’s Slave Jail site. At the time, VCU put off those plans and later designated a 50-foot area to memorialize the burial ground.

“We recognize that obviously nothing can be done to the burial ground if it’s paved over,” says Ana Edwards, a protest organizer with the Richmond Defenders. “Our concern is … the decision-making process is out of the hands of the community.”

Last year the city-appointed Slave Trail Commission held discussions with VCU in which the university offered to sell the property for $3 million. That offer remains, according to VCU spokeswoman Pamela Lepley, but city or private funds to make the purchase have been elusive.

“Where would we get $3 million from?” says Delegate Delores McQuinn, head of the commission. There was talk of a trade-off for other property, she says, because VCU’s interest is to provide "parking for their students.”

Further discussions with VCU have not occurred, she says, and a spokeswoman for Richmond Mayor Dwight C. Jones says there’s been little conversation in the mayor’s office yet over how or whether to proceed with the Burial Ground.

“It’s not anything the administration has taken any position on as of yet,” says Jones’ press secretary, Tammy Hawley.


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Comment:
Wednesday, August 12, 2009 9:10:16 PM by tvnewsbadge
Even if this Style Weekly attempt at justification is true, it misses the point.
Any bad act, even murder, can be justified on some level but that does not absolve the perps of their guilt.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009 11:36:50 AM by donkey
Why is there such protest when this place is already paved, VCU just wants to REpave it. Where was all the commotion the first time the asphalt was layed?
Tuesday, August 11, 2009 1:29:14 PM by Fourth Estate Fan
Can you imagine what Arlington National Cemetery would look like if it were to be "asphalted" over to keep the "ghoulish" out? Ridiculous logic. Why do our so-called city leaders allow themselves to be talked down to and virtually ignored by VCU and members of the business community hell-bent on doing their business in secret, the people be damned?

Kudos to Chris Dovi for staying on top of this story.
Tuesday, August 11, 2009 12:22:50 PM by Scott Burger
What spin...

http://www.oregonhill.net/2009/08/04/its-not-the-first-time-that-vcu-disregarded-slave-history/




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